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Belgium police arrest 16, Paris fugitive still at large

November 23, 2015 07:45 am | Updated October 18, 2016 03:05 pm IST - Brussels

19 raids carried out in Molenbeek and other boroughs of Brussels; three raids in other cities.

Belgian soldiers patrol in central Brussels, after security was tightened in Belgium following the fatal attacks in Paris. Belgium raised the alert status for its capital Brussels to the highest level on Saturday, shutting the metro and warning the public to avoid crowds because of a "serious and imminent" threat of an attack.

Belgian prosecutors announced early today that police had detained 16 people in 22 raids but that Paris fugitive Salah Abdeslam was not among them. Despite the raids, authorities maintained their highest terror alert in the capital for a third straight day.

Federal prosecutor Eric Van Der Sypt said 19 raids were carried out in Molenbeek and other boroughs of Brussels and three raids were carried out in other cities.

“We have to stress that no firearms or explosives were discovered ... during the raids,” Van Der Sypt said. “Certain elements in the investigation made yesterday’s intervention necessary. The investigation will in any case be relentlessly continued.”

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One of those detained was injured when a car he was in tried to hit the police during an attempted getaway, Van Der Sypt said. The raids capped a tense day with hundreds of troops patrolling and authorities hunting for one or more suspected militants, the Belgian government chose yesterday to keep the capital on the highest state of alert into the start of the workweek to prevent a Paris-style attack.

Citing a “serious and imminent” threat, Prime Minister Charles Michel announced that schools and universities in Brussels will be closed today, with the subway remaining shut down, preventing a return to normal in the city that is also home to the European Union’s main institutions.

“We fear an attack like in Paris, with several individuals, perhaps in several places,” Mr. Michel said after chairing a meeting of Belgium’s National Security Council.

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While Brussels was kept on the highest of four alert levels, the rest of the country remains on a Level 3 alert, meaning an attack is “possible and likely.” “Nobody is pleased with such a situation. Neither are we.

But we have to take our responsibility,” Mr. Michel said.

Western leaders stepped up the rhetoric against the Islamic State group, which has claimed responsibility for the attacks in Paris that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds more; the suicide bombings in Beirut that killed 43 people and injured more than 200; and the downing of the Russian jetliner carrying 224 people in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. All happened within the past month.

“We will not accept the idea that terrorist assaults on restaurants and theatres and hotels are the new normal, or that we are powerless to stop them,” President Barack Obama said in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said IS must be destroyed at all costs. “We must annihilate Islamic State worldwide ... and we must destroy Islamic State on its own territory,” Le Drian said. “That’s the only possible direction.”

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